Rose Under Fire by Elizabeth Wein

Share

17262236
Title: Rose under Fire
Author: Elizabeth Wein
Expected Publication: September 10th, 2013 by Miramax (Disney)

Summary: While flying an Allied fighter plane from Paris to England, American ATA pilot and amateur poet, Rose Justice, is captured by the Nazis and sent to Ravensbrück, the notorious women’s concentration camp. Trapped in horrific circumstances, Rose finds hope in the impossible through the loyalty, bravery and friendship of her fellow prisoners. But will that be enough to endure the fate that’s in store for her?

Elizabeth Wein, author of the critically-acclaimed and best-selling Code Name Verity, delivers another stunning WWII thriller. The unforgettable story of Rose Justice is forged from heart-wrenching courage, resolve, and the slim, bright chance of survival.

Review: Out of the thousands of books I’ve read, this one is going to sit among my all-time favorites. There is a phenomenal balance of history and narrative that will engage readers while offering harrowing lessons in history. I am not an air and space girl. My husband loves planes, and he was giddy when we went to the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum in Washington D.C. As much as I want to love planes, I don’t find them to be interesting. This book changed my outlook.

Rose under Fire has many similarities with Wein’s Code Name Verity. They are both written in an epistolary format, involve pilots/airplanes, and are set during World War II. Both offer wonderfully complex themes about friendship, loyalty, and the strength of women. However, Rose under Fire focuses more on concentration camps, while Code Name Verity dealt more with the interrogation techniques used during World War II. Neither of these two elements drove the novels, but they are two plot features that make the texts quite different from one other. I found CNV to be a bit slow in the beginning (which isn’t the case with all readers), but I was hooked to Rose under Fire from the very first page. Wein writes characters so vividly that I still feel their presence in my life, long after I finish the books. I recommend this book to everyone. It will appeal to readers of all ages, backgrounds, genders, and interest levels.

Teacher’s Tools for Navigation: Teachers, this is a MUST-HAVE book. It is phenomenally written and shows the truly complexity of young adult literature. It can be used to teach elements like setting, character, dialogue, the epistolary format, imagery, voice, and theme. Students might write letters back to Rose, or they could analyze one of the many well-developed characters in this story. It would also make for a great research unit of topics like the Nuremberg Trials, female WWII pilots, flying bombs, or the experimentation on Holocaust prisoners. History teachers will also find this text to be invaluable.

Discussion Questions: What loyalties did the Holocaust prisoners have for each other? What are some examples of incidents that showed this loyalty?; Why were the Rabbits so important to the concentration camp? What did they add to the story as a whole?; How does Maddie’s friendship with Rose differ from her friendship with Julie?; Why was Nick’s character important throughout the story? How does his level of importance change, and why?; Rose has very different friendships with many of the characters. Describe how three of these friendships differ from one another.; Does the novel end in a hopeful way? Why or why not?

We Flagged: I marked so many passages that it is hard to choose just a few, so I selected two longer quotes that show the quality of Wein’s writing.

Incredible Imagery:

“…and the reason everyone in there was trying to get out in the rain was because they were dying of thirst.

Really dying of it, I think.

Hands and arms and heads stuck out anywhere there was a gap—cupped hands collecting rainwater, some holding bowls or even just a piece of cloth to collect moisture—I saw one woman lying on her back with her hair in the black cinder mud at the tent’s edge, her mouth open, letting a rivulet of water stream down the canvas and into her mouth.”

And Beautiful Figurative Language:

“Hope—you think of hope as a bright thing, a strong thing, sustaining. But it’s not. It’s the opposite. It’s simply this: lumps of stale bread stuck down your shirt. Stale gray bread eked out with ground fish bones, which you won’t eat because you’re going to give it away, and maybe you’ll get a message through to your friend. That’s all you need.

God, I was hungry.”

Please note: The above quotes are from the Advanced Reader Copy. The e-book (a galley) did not provide page or chapter numbers. The quotes may change when the book is published.

Read This If You Loved: Code Name Verity by Elizabeth Wein, Between Shades of Gray by Ruta Sepetys, Nazi Hunters by Neal Bascomb, Night by Elie Wiesel

Recommended For:

 litcirclesbuttonsmall closereadinganalysisbuttonsmall classroomlibrarybuttonsmall

026F3FBCC8C3913BD3A4D3F6920340D5

Thank you to NetGalley and Disney for sending me the Advanced Reader Copy!

Barbed Wire Baseball by Marissa Moss

Share

NF PB 2013

Nonfiction Picture Book Wednesday

Nonfiction Picture Book Wednesday is hosted by Kid Lit Frenzy and was started to help promote the reading of nonfiction texts. Most Wednesdays, we will be participating and will review a nonfiction text (though it may not always be a picture book).
Be sure to visit Kid Lit Frenzy and see what other nonfiction books are shared this week!

barbed

Barbed Wire Baseball
Author: Marissa Moss
Illustrated by: Yuko Shimizu
Published April 9th, 2013 by Harry N. Abrams

Goodreads Summary: As a boy, Kenichi “Zeni” Zenimura dreams of playing professional baseball, but everyone tells him he is too small. Yet he grows up to be a successful player, playing with Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig! When the Japanese attack Pearl Harbor in 1941, Zeni and his family are sent to one of ten internment camps where more than 110,000 people of Japanese ancestry are imprisoned without trials. Zeni brings the game of baseball to the camp, along with a sense of hope.

This true story, set in a Japanese internment camp during World War II, introduces children to a little-discussed part of American history through Marissa Moss’s rich text and Yuko Shimizu’s beautiful illustrations. The book includes author and illustrator notes, archival photographs, and a bibliography.

Review: World War II is the most infamous war and it is taught to all students at some point in their career. They learn about Pearl Harbor and the Atomic Bomb and the Holocause and Hitler, but way too often what happened here in the US is not discussed. All of the Japanese Americans living on the West Coast of the US (62% were US citizens) were interned because our fear overwhelmed us so much that it was the only solution that seemed plausible. I felt that the fear that was felt after the Pearl Harbor bombings is very similar to what was felt 12 years ago today.

Barbed Wire Baseball does discuss the internment camps, but I think that the theme of this book is not about the camps but about how a love of something can turn a poor situation into something else if you are determined.

The story is just one part of the book. What moves it to a higher level is the author and illustrator. Marissa Moss has someone captured the tone of the story. It begins with hopefulness then to hopelessness and finally back to joyousness. Her ability to manipulate the tone throughout makes the story touch the reader even more. Yuko Shimizu’s illustrations are done with a Japenese calligraphy brush and ink adding to the connection the reader will feel with the story. Just beautiful.

Teacher’s Tools for Navigation: I think this book mostly leads to a discussion about the historical event that is shared in the book. In my classroom, I would share it as a read aloud and then jump into a discussion about Zeni, baseball, the internment camps, and World War II. The bibliography in the back of the book gives great websites to visit to continue the discussion.

Discussion Questions: Zeni doesn’t listen to his parents and went for what he wanted: baseball. He overcame his height and those who didn’t believe in him and was able to work towards his dreams. What is something that you’ve overcome even though others didn’t believe in you?; How can you compare/contrast how US citizens responded to Japanese Americans after Pearl Harbor to how US citizens responded to American Muslims after 9/11?

We Flagged: “Zeni stood staring at the dry earth, which was broken up every now and then by a few scrubby bits of green. In all the brown and gray, with a dull, coppery sky overhead, he felt as if he were shrinking into a tiny hard ball.

There was only one thing that could make the desert camp a home – baseball. Zeni unpacked his favorite photo, the one that showed him in uniform, lined up with baseball legends Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig towering like redwood trees beside him. He had played with the Yankee stars in an exhibition game back home in Fresno, and he hadn’t felt small at all. He pinned the picture up over his bed. He was going to play baseball again. Here, in the desolate middle of nowhere.” (p. 9-10)

Read This If You Loved: Something to Prove by Robert Skead, Silent Star by Bill Wise, Brothers at Bat by Audrey Vernick, Keeping Score by Linda Sue Park, Nonfiction books about World War II or Japanese Internment Camps

Recommended For: 

readaloudbuttonsmall classroomlibrarybuttonsmall closereadinganalysisbuttonsmall

Signature

Top Ten Tuesday: Books We’d Love to See as Movies or TV Shows

Share

 

top ten tuesday

Top Ten Tuesday is an original feature/weekly meme created at The Broke and the Bookish. The feature was created because The Broke and Bookish are particularly fond of lists (as are we!). Each week a new Top Ten list topic is given and bloggers can participate.

 Today’s Topic: Top Books We’d Love to See as Movies or TV Shows

Let’s imagine these in a perfect world, where movies/TV shows didn’t butcher books. 🙂

Ricki

1. The Fault in our Stars by John Green

Luckily, this dream is coming true. As with all books I love, I am anxious to see how it comes out. I am glad to see that John Green is on the set. 🙂

2. Out of the Easy by Ruta Sepetys

This would work really well as a movie because the setting is so richly described. New Orleans in the 1950s? Awesome. Let’s do this.

3. I Hunt Killers by Barry Lyga

I love Criminal Minds, the TV show, and this book has some similarities but is quite different. I could see this book making for a great TV series, and I think the public would love it.

4. The Fifth Wave by Rick Yancey

With The Walking Dead craze, I foresee that this book would make for an awesome TV series, as well. No, there are no zombies in this book, but it is a fascinating take on a dystopian setting, so I think it would have a widespread appeal.

5. Shine by Lauren Myracle

The themes and issues in this book are so very important, and I would like to see them in movie format. Inevitably, when a book becomes a movie, more people become aware of the book. This book is worthy of the public’s attention.

Kellee

 1. Graceling Realm by Kristin Cashore

I would love to see this on the screen if it was done correctly. The Seven Kingdoms would be so cool to see and it would be amazing to see the magic and beauty in the books.

2. Zita the Spacegirl by Ben Hatke

I love Zita and I would love to see her story as a cartoon! If you have read it, can’t you picture it too?!?!?!

3. Sidekicked by John David Anderson

I love superhero stories and this is one of my favorites I’ve ever read, so I would love to see it as a movie. Maybe by the same guy who did Spy High because that is kind of how I picture it in my head.

4. Hurt Go Happy by Ginny Rorby

I love this story and I would love to see it on the big screen! It would have to be done so right or it would make me angry, but if done correctly, the emotions that this book exudes would radiate off the screen.

5. Endangered by Eliot Schrefer

Like Hurt Go Happy, this book is one I love and the emotions and themes are so important. I also think that if the cinematography was correct, it would be a beautiful yet so intense/conflict-filled movie.

Honorary. Percy Jackson and the Olympians series by Rick Riordan

I know. It is a movie already. But I want it to be done again and right. The Lightning Thief and its sequels are some of my favorite books and the mythology and adventure in it would make a perfect movie IF DONE CORRECTLY!

 

Which book would you love to see as a movie or TV show? 

RickiSigandSignature

 

It’s Monday! What Are You Reading? 9/9/13

Share

IMWAYR

It’s Monday! What Are You Reading? From Picture Books to YA!

It’s Monday! What are you Reading? is a meme hosted by Sheila at Book Journeys. It is a great way to recap what you read and/or reviewed the previous week and to plan out your reading and reviews for the upcoming week. It’s also a great chance to see what others are reading right now…you just might discover the next “must-read” book!

Jen Vincent, of Teach Mentor Texts, and Kellee decided to give It’s Monday! What Are You Reading? a kidlit focus. If you read and review books in children’s literature – picture books, chapter books, middle grade novels, young adult novels, anything in the world of kidlit – join us! We love this meme and think you will, too.

We encourage everyone who participates to support the blogging community by visiting at least three of the other book bloggers that link up and leave comments for them.

Last Week’s Posts

top ten tuesday salem jackie

waluk battling Science Content

**Click on any picture to view the post**

 

Last Week’s Journeys

Kellee: A valley of reading to make up for my peak last week—no finished books this week. I blame being sick this weekend, because I usually get most of my reading done on Friday nights and Saturdays. Plus side, I am reading a really great book—Guys Read: Other Worlds edited by Jon Scieszka which, so far, is my favorite Guys Read. I’m really enjoying every story so far!

Ricki: This week, I finished listening to Grave Mercy by R.L. LaFevers. It was dark, mysterious, and purely wonderful. If you like fantasy, I highly recommend it. I listened to a read-aloud of The Other Side by Jacqueline Woodson. This one brought me close to tears. I loved this children’s book. Lastly, I finished Trash by Andy Mulligan. I’ve always wanted to read this one, and I am glad that I did. All three books were great reads.

This Week’s Expeditions

Kellee: This week I am going to finish Guys Read: Other Worlds and then start Stained by Cheryl Rainfield. I also have a pile of picture books I want to read this week. Should be a good reading week!

Ricki: After my husband falls asleep, I steal the Kindle each night and read a bit more of Dream Thieves by Maggie Stiefvater. I also just started The Spectacular Now by Tim Tharp. I read this while my husband has the Kindle. 🙂 Lastly, I just downloaded Enchanted by Alethea Kontis to my phone. This was a free AudioSync book this summer. I plan to start this one on the drive to school tomorrow!

Upcoming Week’s Posts

top ten tuesday barbed 17262236 moonbase

boywho hitleryouth Math Content

 So, what are you reading?

Link up below and go check out what everyone else is reading. Please support other bloggers by viewing and commenting on at least 3 other blogs. If you tweet about your Monday post, tag the tweet with #IMWAYR!

 Signatureand RickiSig

Novels with Science Content

Share

Science ContentScience-Content

I had someone ask for some recommendations of books that have science content within them and as well as books with math content. These requests has made me realize that there may be other teachers out there that may want some of these same recommendations. Today I will share with you the science books I recommended and next week I’ll share the math books.

This list contains books that are middle school and high school level. I started this list when an 8th grade science teacher asked me for recommendations. He wanted books that weren’t directly “science” books but that had science elements within them. Next to each book I’ve included how the book connects with the content. Also, many of these books are one of a series, so their sequels or companions would have science content as well.

(List updated 9-2019 & 8/2023)

Life as we Knew it: Meteor hits moon and the effects from the disaster
 Moonbase Crisis: Space exploration, Space science
 Trapped: Meteorology
 An American Plague: Medical (Virology), Yellow fever epidemic
 Fever 1793: Fictionalized account of same epidemic
 Blizzard!: Meteorology
 Ashfall: Geology, Yellowstone eruption
 Eye of the Storm: Meteorology
 Feed: AI, Technology
 Heir Apparent: Technology, Game simulation
 Silverwing: Chiroptologist (Study of bats)
 This Dark Endeavor: Alchemy, Medical
 Uglies: Plastic surgery, Technology, Oil contamination
 Girls Don’t Fly: Ornithology (Study of birds)
 Hurt Go Happy: Animal testing, Chimp acquisition of language (ASL), Deafness
 Airborn: Zoology, Airships
 Okay for Now: NASA Apollo Mission, National Audubon Society
 Ender’s Game: Space science (Low gravity, alien technology, space craft/station)
I, Robot: Robotics
 Leviathan: Genetic engineering, Mechanics
The Way We Fall: Microbiology, Pandemic, Quarantine
 Lost in the River of Grass: Everglades
 Dark Life: Subsea settlement
 Ship Breaker: Global warming, Oil
 Half Brother: Linguistics, Animal testing, Chimp acquisition of language (ASL)
 Across the Universe: Space science, Space ship, Computer, Cryonics
 The House of the Scorpion: Cloning
 Peak: Teenager climbing Mt. Everest
2281392 Smiles to Go: Quantum physics, Philosophy
606824 Hoot: (and other Hiaasen middle grade books) Ecology, Zoology
6202556 The Evolution of Calpurnia Tate: Natural History, Evolution
6279600 The Brilliant Fall of Gianna Z: Botany
12444758 Chronal Engine: Dinosaurs
1111741 George’s Secret Key to the Universe: Astronomy
7173399 The Reinvention of Edison Thomas: Physics, Mechanics, Inventing
3494680 Samantha Hansen has Rocks in her Head: Geology
11235712 Cinder: Androids, Cyborgs
The Last Panther: Extinction, Conservation, Environment
Planet Earth is Blue: Challenger expedition, Space
Stung: Bee extinction
Frank Einstein and the Antimatter Motor: Science tinkering, Robots, Inventing, Other science topics
Ethan Marcus Stands Up: Inventions, Problem Solving
Two Truths and a Lie: Fake news, Biology, Other science topics
Song for a Whale: Deafness, Sound waves, Marine biology
Unwind: Live tissue transplant, Rebuilding humans
Dry: Water loss in California
War Cross: Virtual reality
Primates: Primatology
The Fourteenth Goldfish: Genetics, Discovery, History of medicine
A Rover’s Story: Mars rover
Futureland: AI
The Lion of Mars: Mars colonization
Long Distance: Astronomy
The Gravity of Us: NASA, Space travel
The First Rule of Climate Club: Climate change
Global: Global warming
The Last Cuentista: Apocalypse, Space travel, AI
Saving Sunshine: Sea turtle
Paradise on Fire: Wildfire
Haven Jacobs Saves the Planet: Climate change
Shine on Luz Véliz: Coding
Wildfire: Wildfire
All Thirteen: Cave rescue
Rescue at Lake Wild: Ecology, Animal impact
What Stars are Made of: Astronomy
Dinosaur Sanctuary: Paleontology, Genetic mutation
Hope this list is helpful!
What books would you add to the list?
Signature
2019: The books listed include some I have read, some that were shared by the science teacher who asked me for the list, and books shared with me through Twitter when I asked for some help – Thank you to @mselke01 @thebrainlair @Hannahlily & @Loveofxena!

Battling Boy by Paul Pope

Share

battling

Battling Boy
Author and Illustrator: Paul Pope
Expected publication October 8th, 2013 by First Second

Goodreads Summary: The adventure begins in the new graphic novel by comics legend Paul Pope.

Monsters roam through Arcopolis, swallowing children into the horrors of their shadowy underworld. Only one man is a match for them – the genius vigilante Haggard West.

Unfortunately, Haggard West is dead.

Arcopolis is desperate, but when its salvation comes in the form of a twelve-year-old demigod, nobody is more surprised than Battling Boy himself.

IT’S TIME TO MEET AN ELECTRIFYING NEW HERO.

My Review: I am always impressed when an author can not only make an entire new world, but also new mythology. That is exactly what Paul Pope does in his new graphic novel (will be a series).  Arcopolis is a terrifying apocalyptic-esque town where you cannot walk around at night and you are always being watched by monsters. The setting is what makes this story really able to happen.

When reading, I could tell that Paul Pope is a “comic mastermind” because this story is set up very much like a traditional comic (good vs. evil, superheroes); however, there is a new twist on it because our hero is an underdog. This makes the reader root for him even more.

Warning: Cliffhanger ending! Battling Boy better be the first in a series, because I am dying to know what happens!

Teacher’s Tools For Navigation: This book will be loved in middle and high school classroom libraries. Pure comic book fans will love it, fantasy fans will love it, and adventure fans will love it.

Discussion Questions: Battling Boy lets the town believe he did something that he really didn’t – was this the right choice?; How do you think Aurora will play a part in the adventure?; Do you think Battling Boy is going to be able to save Arcopolis?

We Flagged: “The public ceremony of mourning for Haggard West was scheduled for one day… It was extended to three. The private funeral followed. A somber affair by necessity closed-casket.. and it rained. The tomb of the fallen hero. She stood under the umbrella wearing her public face… She learned long ago the special responsbilities of being a hero’s daughter… She wouldn’t allow herself to cry in public. Waves of faces in the rain.” (p. 52-53)

Check out Previews World’s Sneak Peek of Battling Boy to see some of the epic artwork.

Read This If You Loved: Amulet (series) by Kazu Kibuishi, Olympians (series) by George O’Connor, Foiled (series) by Jane Yolen, The Last Dragon by Jane Yolen
[These are adult graphic novels, but very similar feeling with mythology and epic stories] Sandman (series) by Neil Gaiman, Fables (series) by Bill Willingham, The Book of Magic by Neil Gaiman

Recommended For: 

classroomlibrarybuttonsmall

Signature

Waluk by Emilio Ruiz

Share

waluk

Waluk
Author: Emilio Ruiz
Illustrator: Ana Miralles
Expected publication November 1st, 2013 by Delcourt

Goodreads Summary: Young Waluk is all alone. His mother has abandoned him, as is the way of polar bears, and now he must fend for himself. But he doesn’t know much about the world—and unfortunately, his Arctic world is changing quickly. The ice is melting, and food is hard to find.

Luckily, Waluk meets Manitok, a wise old bear with missing teeth and a bad sense of smell. Manitok knows many survival tricks, and he teaches Waluk about seals, foxes, changing seasons, and—when Manitok is caught in a trap—human beings. Has Waluk learned enough from his friend to find a way to save him?

My Review: I’m always a big fan of books that books that tell a great story, but also teaches the reader something – Waluk fits this description.

I love that this story is told in a graphic novel because it allows us to see what Waluk is experiencing. I think this is really important because many readers will not be familiar with the setting and animals.

Additionally, there are nonfiction aspects where global warming and human impact on polar bears is discussed even with a bibliography in the end for students who want to learn more.

Teacher’s Tools For Navigation: I would love to read this graphic novel aloud to my class just to discuss with them the environmental aspects of the book. I think the story really brings global warming and the threat polar bears feel to life. Also, the story would be a great way to discuss point of view/perspective since the story is told from Waluk’s point of view.

Discussion Questions: How is global warming threatening polar bears?; What type of character traits must Waluk have to be willing to go save Manitok?

We Flagged: Manitok “If you want to be like the great Nanook, you’ll have to feed on seal blubber and whale fat.”
Waluk “Sure. Like it’s that easy. The seals laugh at me. Not even the puny lemmings are afraid of me.”
Manitok “Nah, that’s no problem, Buddy. I’m Manitok! Descended from the legend of the great whit bears. I know how to hunt anything.”
Waluk “Really?”
Manitok “Of course! Seals, walruses, belugas, lemmings, razorbills, humans–”
Waluk “Then why are you so thin?”
Manitok “Well, it’s age… see, I’m not as good as I used to be. Frankly, it’s been a while since I’ve gorged on sea lion – taken him down with my fangs, ya know, like it’s no big deal.” (p. 18)

Read This If You Loved: Seekers (series) by Erin Hunter, Nonfiction books about global warming or polar bears, Neversink by Barry Wolverton, [For further POV discussions] Who Stole Mona Lisa? by Ruthie Knapp and The Day the Crayons Quit by Drew Daywalt

Recommended For: 

classroomlibrarybuttonsmall readaloudbuttonsmall

Signature

**Thank you to Netgalley and Lerner Publishing Group (Graphic Universe) for providing the e-galley!**